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Makarand Paranjape (International) assertion Makarand Paranjape i(A75966 works by)
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 A Passage to Uluru : Rethinking Sacred Australia Makarand Paranjape , 2009 single work essay
— Appears in: Sacred Australia : Post-Secular Considerations 2009; (p. 1-20)
1 Preface Makarand Paranjape , 2009 single work criticism
— Appears in: Sacred Australia : Post-Secular Considerations 2009; (p. ix-?)
1 1 y separately published work icon Sacred Australia : Post-Secular Considerations Makarand Paranjape (editor), Thornbury : Clouds of Magellan , 2009 Z1771533 2009 anthology essay criticism
1 Foreword Makarand Paranjape , 2007 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australian Studies Now : An Introductory Reader in Australian Studies 2007; (p. ix-xiii)
1 y separately published work icon English Studies, Indian Perspectives Makarand Paranjape (editor), Aneeta Rajendran (editor), Amit Sarwal (editor), New Delhi : Mantra Books , 2006 Z1828532 2006 single work criticism 'A critical review and examination of the state of English studies in India and the first major re-examination of the discipline to have taken place in the new century... the work includes the study of British, American, Canadian, Australian, African, Indian English, and post-colonial literatures plus the study of translations, Indian texts, literary theory, and new areas such as gender and cinema.'
Source: Biblia Impex website www.bibliaimpex.com
1 Writing across Boundaries : South Asian Diasporas and Homelands Makarand Paranjape , 2003 single work criticism
— Appears in: Diaspora and Multiculturalism : Common Traditions and New Developments 2003; (p. 231-260)
1 Mirroring Ambivalence : Resistance and Reconciliation in South Asian Australia Makarand Paranjape , 2003 single work criticism
— Appears in: Resistance and Reconciliation : Writing in the Commonwealth 2003; (p. 288-307)
1 Triple Ambivalence : Australia, Canada and South Asia in the Diasporic Imagination Makarand Paranjape , 2002 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australian Canadian Studies , vol. 20 no. 2 2002; (p. 81-113) Journal of the Department of English , vol. 32 no. 1-2 2005; (p. 232-260)
Focussing on 'the dialectics of longing and belonging', this article examines the ways in which 'diasporic fictions' relate to their homelands. It compares texts and attitudes in three continents: North America, South Asia and Australia. Part I of the article deals with the Australia-Asia relationship and has two sections: 'Australian Attitudes to Asia' and 'Asian Accounts of Australia'. Part II discusses 'South Asian Canada'.
1 y separately published work icon In Diaspora : Theories, Histories, Texts Makarand Paranjape (editor), New Delhi : Indialog Publications , 2001 Z1392771 2001 anthology criticism essay

'Over the last twenty years or so, Indian diaspora has suddenly come of age. Shedding its minority status, it has demonstrated its inclination for becoming a majority, not in the sense of numerical superiority, but of growing up, maturing, attaining self-apprehension and self-expression. It can now look at itself, the host country, and the homeland, with a critical humor that has not necessarily dulled its passion or lessened the intensity of its engagement. Moreover, the Indian diaspora has become an important economic force, whose reputed net worth exceeds hundreds of billions of dollars. It is, at once, more mobile and cohesive than ever before, what with faster means of travel and communication. Not only has the old diaspora made inroads into the new, but the access of all the scattered peoples of Indian origin to India, the motherland, has also increased dramatically. Now, it actually seems as if this diaspora has an unprecedented ascendancy and leverage both in the host country and the homeland.' (Publication summary)

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